Urine marking is done on walls, trees, and hydrants
with small amounts of urine as frequently as your dog can physically manage.
Excessive stress can lead to the breakdown of the lining of the bladder
with small amounts of urine leakage into the bladder wall.
Not exact matches
There are often times
with younger babies where you change a diaper after only a
small amount of urine or poop and in those cases if the mess is contained to the pod only then reusing the shell is a definite possibility.
Despite urinary frequency, only
small amounts of urine are able to pass, and this is
with severe discomfort.
In patients
with normal kidney function, oliguria can indicate dehydration, and the
small amount of urine produced will likely be concentrated (
urine specific gravity [USG] > 1.030).5 Other laboratory parameters that change
with dehydration include packed cell volume and total protein (PCV / TP) levels, which demonstrate hemoconcentration (high PCV) and hyperproteinemia (high TP) in dehydrated patients5 due to the loss
of the fluid portion
of the blood as the body tries to maintain fluid balance and homeostasis.
Cats
with cystitis urinate frequently, producing
small amounts of blood - tinged
urine.
With urine marking the dog deposits a
smaller amount of urine.
Cats
with cystitis will squat and attempt to pass or pass a
small amount of urine which may be slightly blood tinged.
Normal kidneys reabsorb the Amino Acid cystine so that only
small amounts pass into the
urine, while dogs
with mutations
of both copies
of the SLC3A1 gene fail to reabsorb cystine allowing large
amounts to pass into the
urine, hence the name cystinuria.
Signs
of a urinary tract infection in your pet include lethargy, loss
of appetite, increased frequency
of urination often
with smaller amounts at a time, straining at urination which may be painful leading to vocalization, inappropriate urination in the home or outside the litterbox, bloody urination, and often a strong offensive odor to the
urine.
In dogs
with concentrated
urine, a
small amount of urinary bilirubin can be normal, especially in male dogs.
Often the
amount of blood in the
urine is so
small it can only be detected by testing
with a specially treated paper, or by looking at the
urine sediment under the microscope.
Given this method, the
urine may be contaminated
with a
small amount of blood.
Since these toilets can cope
with urine, I'm sure they could cope
with the
small amount of water that a bidet produces.